Abstract

The leucocyte migration inhibition (LMI) was determined in an assay after in vitro challenge with beta-lactoglobulin. The assay was considered positive when migration inhibition index was greater than 20% (mean +3 SD of healthy infants). Ninety-eight infants with protracted diarrhoea and failure to thrive, 16 healthy, 12 malnourished, and 16 infants suffering from acute gastroenteritis were studied. Of the 98 patients with protracted diarrhoea, 12 fulfilled Goldman's criteria for cow's milk protein intolerance, 63 had lactose malabsorption, and in 15 no associated causative factor was identified. The mean index of migration inhibition in the cow's milk allergic group (58.83 +/- 11.98) was higher than in healthy controls (8.25 +/- 3.91), the difference being statistically significant (p less than 0.05). The test was positive in all patients with cow's milk protein intolerance. The assay was also positive in four other patients suffering from protracted diarrhoea, two of whom had lactose malabsorption. All the infants with acute gastroenteritis and malnutrition had values within the normal range. The migration inhibition index in five patients with cow's milk intolerance had declined to 24.74 +/- 4.87 in assays performed 1-6 weeks after return of clinical tolerance to cow's milk (p less than 0.05) but the test was still within the positive range in three of the five infants. These results suggest that this cell mediated immune assay is a sensitive test for the diagnosis of cow's milk protein intolerance in infants. The specificity needs to be reassessed in the light of more objective criteria for the diagnosis of cow's milk protein intolerance.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call